Calum,
I don't quite understand - you're saying in places where there were no hominids, animals quickly went extinct, but where hominids existed the rate of extinction was slower? That doesn't exactly support your theory... In fact, it seems to be working in reverse from what your whole point seems to be about. Please clarify?
It makes no sense to slowly and progressively create various hominids (I don't think any of these hominids came close to accomplishing the environmental destruction humans have reeked on the Earth) just to prepare the animal/plant kingdom for spiritual beings. Besides, to 'prepare' animals for spiritual beings means they would need to evolve anyway. The spiritual humans would be very different from the non-spirit hominids.
Where hominids existed, animals were able to adapt their behaviours to fear two legged hunters, who used tools and hunting technique which other predators did not use.
The Americas, Northern Eurasia, Australia and many larger islands lost the vast majority of their larger and all of their largest mammals. These are the areas with no evidence of hominids. Many studies have shown that humans were the, or at least one of the reasons for these extinctions.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/20 ... 140706.htm
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi ... ne.0008331
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8112885.stm
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17488447
Unlike animals (hominids) humans hunt for many reasons. They hunt for food, clothing, trophies, ritual, etc. Animals in areas that did not contain hominids were ill prepared to deal with two legged hunters. The hunters they knew to fear, had four legs.
Don't waste your time posting a new topic, I have your answers:
1) When God warns Adam not to eat of the tree of Good and Evil, he says 'you will surely die'. However, he did eat of the tree. We know he died, but not physically. This is a spiritual reference.
2) Eve is called 'the mother of all living'. Does this mean she was the mother of elephants, chickens, and mice? No! This is a spiritual reference. She is the mother of all those who have spirit.
3) The Bible says God made man in his image. This is obviously a spiritual reference, as God is not material, and doesn't have eyes, a nose, feet, a mouth, etc, so we can conclude that Adam was made in God's spiritual image and not his physical one. That is to say, he was given spirit.
Actually, none of those answers are what I believe, nor what the Bible teaches. Although, #2 is close enough.
This is the Hebrew (transliteration) of Genesis 2:17:
Beyom (in the day)
acholcha (you eat)
mimenu (from it)
mot (die)
tamut (you die)
The back-to-back uses of
mut (die) emphasize the certainty of the result. That is why most translations translate the two words as "surely die." The more I have looked at the sentence, the more I believe it was referring to when the outcome would become certain, not when the outcome would take place.
"In the day you eat from it your dying shall be certain." Remember, Adam had access to the Tree of Life, so his death was not a certainty. By the way, the context is dealing with physical life and death, not spiritual.
In Genesis 3:4 the Serpent does not argue about the timing, he just denies the result. Also, God brings up the fact that Adam would not die immediately (Genesis 3:17), but that his death would take place (Genesis 3:19).
"In toil you will eat of it all the days of your life." "....you will eat bread, until you return to the ground." The day Adam ate the fruit, God made his future death certain, by removing him from the Tree of Life (Genesis 3:22-24).
This is very similar to what we see in 1 Kings 2:37, 42:
Beyom (in the day) [you leave Jerusalem]
yadoa (know)
teda (you know)
ki (that)
mot (die)
tamut (you die).
"In the day [you leave Jerusalem] you will know for sure that your dying is certain." Shimei's journey took at least 2 days and probably more like 3 or 4. Gath was at least 30 miles away and a day's journey was about 20-30 miles, plus he had to find his servants. Thus, the meaning was not that he would die on that very day.
In both cases the meaning was something like
"once you do this, you can be sure that you will die." The phrase referred to when (the time that) the result would be made certain, not to the timing of the actual result (i.e. when death would take place).
I will post on the "image of God" soon.